Various regulatory programs require Bioaccumulation “B” assessment, e.g., REACH, with designations of Bioaccumulative (B), very B (vB), not (B/vB) Various metrics for Bioaccumulation assessment exist, e.g., K OW , lab BCF, lab BMF, half-life, field BMF, field BAF, field TMF Various quantitative criteria and quantitative and qualitative thresholds for the various Bioaccumulation metrics exist, e.g., REACH Annex XIII There are no defined implementation strategies to integrate various Lines of Evidence (LOE) in a transparent, Quantitative Weight of Evidence (QWOE) Approach A general approach for “B” assessment is proposed in Figure 1 Introduction Develop a user-friendly, organizational framework and computational tool in the form of an Excel/ VBA spreadsheet for integrating various Lines of Evidence (LOE) to aid “B” assessment Provide the capacity for transparency and consistency in “B” assessment As necessary, guide integrated (tiered) testing strategies (ITS; i.e., enabling generation of additional LOE) to address uncertainty in “B” assessment, e.g., Fig. 1 Objectives The Bioaccumulation Assessment Tool: An Organizational Framework for Bioaccumulation Assessment Jon Arnot 1,3 , James Armitage 2,3 , Liisa Toose 1 , Karen L. Foster 4,5 , Michelle Embry 6 1 ARC Arnot Research & Consulting, Toronto, Canada; 2 AES Armitage Environmental Sciences, Toronto, Canada 3 Department of Physical & Environmental Sciences, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, Canada 4 KFER Karen Foster Environmental Research, Peterborough, Canada; 5 Trent University, Peterborough, Canada 6 ILSI Health and Environmental Sciences Institute, Washington, USA Stakeholder involvement (e.g., industry, academia, regulatory scientists) included during development - BAT Advisory Team Biotransformation rate constants obtained from in vivo, in silico and in vitro methods are included for aquatic and terrestrial The BAT (Ver.1.0) will be freely available and accompanied by supporting documentation (e.g., tool description and user’s guide) The BAT can continue to evolve with the emerging science and from practical experience in its application and evaluation Discussion A conceptual overview of the Bioaccumulation Assessment Tool (BAT) is shown in Figure 2 for aquatic bioaccumulation assessment and Figure 3 for terrestrial bioaccumulation assessment The BAT brings together measured and modelled data, e.g., chemical properties, in vivo data (BCFs, BMFs, half-lives, absorption efficiency), in vitro data (intrinsic hepatic clearance rate) and in silico data (BCF-QSARs, biotransformation rate), which are treated as Lines of Evidence (LOE) Multiple LOE (“Input” to the BAT) are evaluated using Data Evaluation Templates (DETs) – Figure 4 LOE are subject to data quality evaluations using DETs – Figure 5 Primary “Output” includes a suite of “B” assessment endpoints presented against user-defined criteria and thresholds (e.g., BCF > 5,000 L/kg = “vB”) – Figure 6 Information is compared for “B“ assessment, e.g., half-lives in terrestrial organisms vs. fish BCFs, and summarized using a Quantitative Weight of Evidence (QWOE) Approach – Figure 7 The chemical undergoing assessment can also be compared against measurements for benchmark chemicals for the various metrics Methods Figure 1: A general work-flow for bioaccumulation assessment. Acknowledgments: BAT Advisory Team & Figure 2: Conceptual overview of the module for the aquatic bioaccumulation assessment tool. 1 Instead of octanol as a surrogate for lipid, tiered approach for inputs of partitioning data; if available, e.g., k MW , K SW , K PW , etc; ppLFERs will be recommended - UFZ AQUATIC Figure 3: Conceptual overview of the module for the terrestrial bioaccumulation assessment tool. 1 Instead of octanol as a surrogate for lipid, tiered approach for inputs of partitioning data; if available, e.g., k MW , K SW , K PW , etc; ppLFERs will be recommended - UFZ TERRESTRIAL Figure 4: Lab BMF Data Entry Template (DET) Figure 5: Lab BMF data quality evaluation criteria in Lab BMF DET Figure 7: Example of summary QWOE information Figure 6: User-defined criteria and thresholds for B assessment metrics